Interpretation:
Among the given options, “two substances present, two phases present” characterizes what has to be chosen.
Concept Introduction:
The study that is concerned with composition, transformation, and characteristics of matter is known as chemistry. Anything that occupied space and has mass is known as matter. Amount of matter present in the sample is termed as mass. Matter includes all the things that are naturally occurring things and synthetic materials.
Matter can also be classified based on their chemical composition as pure substance or a mixture. Pure substance contains a single kind of matter and by physical means it cannot be separated into any other kind of matter. In other words, pure substance contain nothing else than the substance alone. Mixture is a combination of two or more pure substances and the important thing is that the pure substances retain its chemical identity even if it is mixed with other substance. This is because they are not chemically combined rather they are physically mixed.
Mixtures can be of two types. They are homogeneous and heterogeneous mixture. Homogeneous mixture is the one that contains only one visible phase while heterogeneous mixture is the one that contains visibly more phases and each of the phases has different properties. Heterogeneous mixtures do not have the same property throughout while homogeneous mixture has.
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Chapter 1 Solutions
General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry
- 2. Propose an efficient synthesis for each of the following transformations. Pay careful attention to both the regio and stereochemical outcomes. ¡ H H racemicarrow_forwardZeroth Order Reaction In a certain experiment the decomposition of hydrogen iodide on finely divided gold is zeroth order with respect to HI. 2HI(g) Au H2(g) + 12(9) Rate = -d[HI]/dt k = 2.00x104 mol L-1 s-1 If the experiment has an initial HI concentration of 0.460 mol/L, what is the concentration of HI after 28.0 minutes? 1 pts Submit Answer Tries 0/5 How long will it take for all of the HI to decompose? 1 pts Submit Answer Tries 0/5 What is the rate of formation of H2 16.0 minutes after the reaction is initiated? 1 pts Submit Answer Tries 0/5arrow_forwardangelarodriguezmunoz149@gmail.com Hi i need help with this question i am not sure what the right answers are.arrow_forward
- Saved v Question: I've done both of the graphs and generated an equation from excel, I just need help explaining A-B. Below is just the information I used to get the graphs obtain the graph please help. Prepare two graphs, the first with the percent transmission on the vertical axis and concentration on the horizontal axis and the second with absorption on the vertical axis and concentration on the horizontal axis. Solution # Unknown Concentration (mol/L) Transmittance Absorption 9.88x101 635 0.17 1.98x101 47% 0.33 2.95x101 31% 0.51 3.95x10 21% 0.68 4.94x10 14% 24% 0.85 0.62 A.) Give an equation that relates either the % transmission or the absorption to the concentration. Explain how you arrived at your equation. B.) What is the relationship between the percent transmission and the absorption? C.) Determine the concentration of the ironlll) salicylate in the unknown directly from the graph and from the best fit trend-line (least squares analysis) of the graph that yielded a straight…arrow_forwardDon't used Ai solutionarrow_forwardCalculate the differences between energy levels in J, Einstein's coefficients of estimated absorption and spontaneous emission and life time media for typical electronic transmissions (vnm = 1015 s-1) and vibrations (vnm = 1013 s-1) . Assume that the dipolar transition moments for these transactions are in the order of 1 D.Data: 1D = 3.33564x10-30 C m; epsilon0 = 8.85419x10-12 C2m-1J-1arrow_forward